Thermal and Moisture Managing E-Textiles Enabled by Janus Hierarchical Gradient Honeycombs

Yufei Zhang, Jingjing Fu, Yichun Ding, Aijaz Ahmed Babar, Xian Song, Fan Chen, Xinge Yu, Zijian Zheng*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

Moisture and thermal comfort are critical for long-term wear. In recent years, there has been rapidly growing attention on the importance of the comfortability in wearable electronic textiles (e-textiles), particularly in fields such as health monitoring, sports training, medical diagnosis and treatment, where long-term comfort is crucial. Nonetheless, simultaneously regulating thermal and moisture comfort for the human body without compromising electronic performance remains a significant challenge to date. Herein, a thermal and moisture managing e-textile (TMME-textile) that integrates unidirectional water transport and daytime radiative cooling properties with highly sensitive sensing performance is developed. The TMME-textile is made by patterning sensing electrodes on rationally designed Janus hierarchical gradient honeycombs that offer wetting gradient and optical management. The TMME-textile can unidirectionally pump excessive sweat, providing a dry and comfortable microenvironment for users. Moreover, it possesses high solar reflectivity (98.3%) and mid-infrared emissivity (89.2%), which reduce skin temperature by ≈7.0 °C under a solar intensity of 1 kW m−2. The TMME-textile-based strain sensor displays high sensitivity (0.1749 kPa−1) and rapid response rate (170 ms), effectively enabling smooth long-term monitoring, especially during high-intensity outdoor sports where thermal and moisture stresses are prominent challenges to conventional e-textiles. © 2023 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2311633
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume36
Issue number13
Online published19 Dec 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 28 Mar 2024

Funding

Y.Z. and J.F. contributed equally to this work. This work was supported by the RGC Senior Research Fellow Scheme (SRFS2122-5S04), Hong Kong Scholar Program (XJ2021047), and the Hong Kong Polytechnic University (1-W22Q).

Research Keywords

  • directional water transport
  • electronic textiles
  • radiative cooling
  • sports monitoring
  • thermal and moisture management

RGC Funding Information

  • RGC-funded

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